Week 6 — When Data Meets Real Guidance

Week 6 wasn’t about doing more.

It was about making sense of what I’m already doing.


The Setup: Same Habits, Better Questions

By now:

  • Fasting windows are consistent (≈16–17 hours)
  • Eating window is comfortable (≈7–8 hours)
  • Snacking is largely gone
  • Sugar and portions are improving

So the question shifted from:

“Am I doing this right?”

to:

“What actually matters most?”


The Turning Point: InBody vs Hume

This week, I did both:

  • Hume Body Pod scan (at home)
  • InBody scan (doctor’s office)

Result?

They were remarkably close.

That matters.

Not because one replaces the other—but because:

I can now monitor trends at home between appointments.


What Actually Matters (According to My Coach)

I asked a simple question:

“Which numbers should I actually care about?”

Her answer was clear:

  • Skeletal Muscle Mass
  • Body Fat Percentage

Not weight.
Not BMI.

Those are outdated shortcuts.


The Result That Finally Made Sense

For the first time, the data told a clear story:

  • ~3.5 lbs lost
  • ~4 lbs fat lost
  • ~1 lb muscle gained

The math isn’t perfect—but the direction is.

My body is recomposing—not just losing weight.

That explains why the scale didn’t move much earlier.


A Bigger Realization: Weight Isn’t the Goal

This changed my perspective completely.

If the goal is:

  • Strength
  • Longevity
  • Function

Then:

Weight is just a small part of the story.


The Role of At-Home Tools

The Body Pod doesn’t replace my doctor.

It supports the process by:

  • Catching trends early
  • Giving feedback between visits
  • Helping me stay engaged

That’s its real value.


Consistency Matters More Than the Device

One interesting note:

My results matched well…

Lanny’s didn’t.

Why?

He hadn’t been scanning consistently at home.

Which likely affected calibration.

👉 Lesson:

Data is only useful if it’s consistent.


Expanding the Conversation: Blood Testing at Home

I also introduced my coach to at-home blood testing (SiPhox).

Her reaction surprised me:

She liked it.

Not as a replacement—but as a cost-effective option when appropriate.

  • Office blood draw: ~$250
  • At-home option: ~$99 – note this isn’t a full panel, only metrics that need to be monitored closely.

Her guidance:

“Let’s test it and see how it performs.”

So now I’ll be the test subject.


Supplements: Keep It Simple

I asked about supplements.

Her answer was refreshingly simple:

“Everyone should be taking creatine and glutathione.”

We already use glutathione.

So we added:

  • Creatine (clean, single-ingredient powder)

No hype. No stack overload.


Peptides: From Confusion to Clarity

This was the biggest conversation of the week.

Before this, peptides felt like:

  • Endless options
  • Confusing claims
  • Expensive decisions

Now I understand:

1. They’re not forever products

  • Typically used in cycles (~90 days)

2. They’re targeted tools

  • Each one serves a specific purpose

3. Quality matters—a lot

  • Dosing
  • Source
  • Purity

The Reality Check on Cost

Let’s be honest:

Peptides can get expensive.

Especially for two people.

So now the filter becomes:

Is this worth it—for my specific goals?

Not:

“Should I try everything?”


What I’m Using (For Now)

I’ve started a peptide stack focused on:

  • Fat loss
  • Energy
  • Hormonal support

Too early to evaluate—but I’ll track it.


What’s Next on My Radar

  • BPC-157 → inflammation / injury
  • GHK-CU → skin / anti-aging

But I’ll approach both:

  • Slowly
  • With guidance
  • With skepticism where needed

The Industry Reality (Important)

This space is still evolving.

And not all options are equal:

  • Doctor-prescribed → safest
  • Compounded → mixed
  • Grey market → high risk

That’s not fear—it’s just reality.


Freedom To Thrive Reflection

Week 6 gave me something I didn’t have before:

Context.

Not just:

  • What I’m doing

But:

  • Why it matters
  • What to measure
  • What to ignore
  • What to question

Where I Am Now

  • Habits are stable
  • Data is clearer
  • Decisions feel more intentional

And for the first time:

I feel like I understand the system I’m working within.


Looking Ahead

Next focus:

  • Continue refining food choices
  • Watch body composition trends
  • Track peptide response
  • Begin blood test exploration

Because now…

This isn’t just an experiment.

It’s becoming a framework for how I manage my health long-term.


— Jamie Harrington
Freedom to Thrive
Curious explorer of living well in the second half of life.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *